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Counterfeit Bride(34)

By:Sara Craven


Luis said icily, 'You are too late, señora. I regret to inform you that the sacrifice has already been made.'

Teresita gasped. 'Then we are too late? Nicky, you cannot be already  married! It is not possible. How did he force you to do such a thing?  Madre de Dios, I should never have allowed you to come here!'

'You can say that again,' Cliff muttered. 'Señor, I don't want to  apportion blame here, but it seems we have one hell of a mess. Now, I  want your assurance that you didn't use any dement of coercion with  Nicky here....'

Luis shrugged 'I can give no such assurance. I offered Nicola the choice between marriage, or dishonour and jail.'

Cliff's lips parted, then with a helpless gesture, he turned away in silence.

'Tirano-bully!' Teresita exclaimed; 'You should be made to suffer for  the rest of your life for what you have done. Oh, my poor Nicky!'

Watching Luis, Nicola saw the firm lips tighten.

He said, 'Your "poor Nicky" is free to leave my house whenever she  wishes. I regretted my conduct towards her a long time ago, and I intend  to seek an annulment. Does that satisfy you?'

Nicola felt as if she had been turned to stone. She wanted to cry out,  to utter some protest, but no words would come. She stared at Luis, her  green eyes widening with shock and hurt, but he seemed oblivious to her  gaze.

He was speaking to Cliff. 'Your arrival, señor, is in fact opportune. I  presume you are willing to escort my- wife to wherever she wishes to  go?'

'Sure-anything you say,' Cliff agreed, looking embarrassed to death.  'How-how soon can you be ready, honey?' He looked at Nicola.

She was still watching Luis and she saw the flicker of distaste that the casual endearment provoked.

She said shakily, 'Can you wait for a moment? I would like to speak to my husband in private.'

The pleading in her eyes met only coldness in his. For a moment she  thought, panicking, that he was going to refuse. Then he gave a brief  curt nod. She followed him out of the room, conscious that Cliff and  Teresita were watching them in frank amazement. Once the door had closed  behind them, she caught at his sleeve,

'Luis...'

'One moment.' He detached himself from her fingers. 'This hallway is hardly private. We had better go to my study.'

The shutters had been drawn and the room was dim and cool. He set a  chair for her, and she sank into it, her eyes watching him with painful  intensity.

She asked, 'Why are you sending me away?'

'You can ask me that after what has happened between us? This marriage I  forced on you was madness, and it is time we regained our sanity before  we harm each other further. Go away from here, Nicola, leave Mexico,  and soon this brief time in your life will seem like a bad dream.'

'Another one.' She tried to smile, but her lips were trembling. 'Luis, you don't-you can't still think that I- that Ramon...'

'Dios, no!' She saw him flinch. 'No, every foul lie that bitch told is  known to me. And besides,' his mouth twisted bitterly, 'had I not  already proved your-innocence for myself? I behaved like an animal to  you, treated you in a way I would not have treated a girl of the  streets. The only way I can make amends is to give you your freedom.'                       
       
           



       

Freedom, she thought, when her love would be a chain to bind me to you for ever.

She tried to steady her voice, 'Then you don't want me any more?'

. He turned a derisive look on her. 'Not want you, chica? You have a  lovely face and an entrancing body. Who would not want you? But now I  acknowledge it is hardly a sufficient basis for marriage.'

Nicola felt as cold as ice. She said, 'But you thought it was once.'

Luis gave a slight shrug, his face cynical. 'I thought I had explained  that when we encountered each other, Nicola, I was bored with the  prospect of the marriage which awaited me. For a time you were  a-charming novelty, but now that time is past.'

She said almost inaudibly, 'You told-your family that you had fallen in  love with me at first sight. Was it true-or was it just a story?'

He walked across the room and stood with his back to her, looking out  through the shutters. He said quietly, 'It was just a story.'

Her breath escaped in a swift, painful sigh, then she stood up. He  turned back, alerted by her movement. He said evenly, 'You will need  money-and this.' He produced her passport from a drawer and slid it  across the desk to her. 'When you have decided on a place of residence,  perhaps you would let me know so that my lawyers can contact you.'

She said, 'As simple as that.' She picked up the passport and saw there  was money inside it. She let it fall to the desk. 'I don't need your  charity, Luis. I have friends, and I'm quite capable of earning my  living, as I did before we met.'

He stiffened. 'Naturally, there will be a settlement...'

'Which I shall refuse.' She met his eyes steadily. 'I'll take the little  I came with, and nothing else. Perhaps you would be good enough to say  goodbye to Ramon for me.'

She went out of the room without a backward glance, and straight up to  her bedroom. For a moment she stood there, looking around her almost  wildly, as she tried to remember where Maria had put her shoulder bag.  The girl had disapproved of its size and clumsiness and wanted to  dispose of it altogether, but Nicola had refused, and she was thankful  that she had done so. A brief search of one of the capacious cupboards  revealed it, and she threw it on the bed and began packing things into  it-her passport for a start, then a handful of underwear, and her  cosmetics and toilet things. She would need a nightgown. She looked  round for the yellow one she had worn earlier, but it had already been  removed for laundering, and the first one she found in the chest of  drawers was the exquisite confection Señora Mendez had created for her  wedding night. She dropped it as hurriedly as if it had been one of the  gowns of fable which scorched the unlucky wearer. Wherever she slept  tonight, she would make do without one, and tomorrow she would borrow  some cash from Teresita and do some essential shopping. She imagined  they would take her to the Californian border, and if so she could make  her way to Los Angeles, and find Elaine. There might even still be a job  with Trans-Chem, and she would find herself somewhere to live, maybe  beside the ocean. She liked the sea, although she hadn't seen that much  of it in her life. Luis had a villa beside the ocean which she had never  seen, and now she never would.

She stopped, closing her eyes, as pain tore through her. There was no  profit in thinking of all the 'nevers' in her life, but how could she  ban them from her mind? Never to touch him, never to kiss him, or feel  the hard masculine weight of his body against hers again. Never to look  up and meet his ;yes across the dining table. Never to ride with him in  the warm darkness under the stars. Never to feel his child stirring  under her heart.

She stripped off the green dress, as if she was shedding a skin, and  changed into the blue one she had worn when she first came here, tying  her hair back at the nape of her neck with a wide navy ribbon.

Teresita and Cliff were waiting for her in the hall. Cliff's brows rose. 'Is this all you have?'

'No,' she said. 'But it's all I'm taking.'

'You really wish to leave like this?' Teresita put a hand on her arm.  'Surely he owes you something for treating you so callously . . .'

'He owes me nothing,' Nicola said steadily. 'Can you give me a moment  while I say one last goodbye.' She walked into the dining room and  looked up at the portrait of Dona Manuela. She looked at the rose, and  the butterfly pinned into the dark hair, and let the pain have its way  with her again. She thought, i really let the Mariposa legend get to me.  I wanted to be like you. I wanted Luis to love me, as you were loved,  but it was always impossible.

A bewildered Carlos was standing outside as she emerged.

'You are going on a trip, señora?' He was clearly at a loss about her  lack of luggage, and slightly disapproving too, as if he had a poor  opinion of any young bride who went on a trip without her husband.                       
       
           



       

She nodded. 'Is-is Don Luis still in his study? I'd like another word with him.'

Carlos looked genuinely distressed. 'Ah, no, señora. The Señor has gone  to the stables. He gave orders that Malagueno should be saddled for him.  He could not have realised that you intended to depart so soon...'

'It's all right, Carlos,' she said gently. 'I've already said adios. I was just being foolish.'

He said, ' Vaya con Dios, señora, and come back to us soon.'

Nicola smiled waveringly, and went out to the waiting car.

Teresita and Cliff were more than kind, although Nicola guessed they  must both be burning with questions. She sat in the back of the big car,  and stared out of the window as it ate up the miles between La Mariposa  and their eventual destination. She was too listless even to enquire  where that might be.